Let Us Walk
Sermon Illustration
Scripture Passage
Paul’s overriding principle: contentment with one’s calling
This is a much misunderstood passage in Paul that has been used variously to support the continuation of slavery and even a failure to recognize women’s leadership roles in the church and society. Paul believed that Christ was going to return soon and with impending crisis at hand, all other matters such as singleness or marriage, slavery or freedom—all things had to be seen in light of the most important task of sharing God’s Good News as that day of the coming of the Lord was fast approaching. Before that day, there were many hardships also falling on the early Christians and, given the deprivation that some were facing, it seems that singleness was a significant option facing many young Christians and those who had been widowed. While urging that Christians remain in the social condition in which they were called by God, namely—in this case—their married status, Paul appeals to well-known social categories to make his point. Without question the one that has troubled many Christians over the centuries is the call to remain in slavery.
In the broader scope of the passage, however, Paul is claiming that there is no social status higher than another in Christ and, whether married or single, slave or free, Gentile or Jewish, such categories are irrelevant to one’s calling of God in Christ. Paul makes the point here and elsewhere (Gal. 3:28) that there are no social distinctions in the salvation that comes to those who are in Christ.
For Paul, there is no superior social class in the family of God based on gender, ethnicity, or other arbitrary classes of society.
God has called each one Refers to those whom God called to be saved (1:26), not the call to ministry service (compare Acts 13:2). Paul encourages the Corinthian believers to maintain whatever marital situation they were in when they first heard God’s call.
in all the churches Emphasizes that the Corinthian believers have deviated from the standard practices in other churches founded by Paul.
must not undo his circumcision Refers to an epispasm—a surgical procedure intended to disguise the marks of circumcision. Many Gentiles despised circumcision and considered it mutilation. This may have caused some Christian Jews in Corinth to feel ashamed about their circumcision and to seek surgery. Paul advises such people to remain circumcised.
In the ancient world, many Jews tried to reverse the visual signs of circumcision by a process known as “epispasm” (Greek = epispastho), mostly to allow them to attend the baths at gymnasiums and participate in Roman activity without the ridicule that might attend their nakedness in these public places. This operation was most often done during the age of puberty or before so young men could enter into the athletic and gymnastic activities of their Hellenistic counterparts without the stigma of circumcision being a source of ridicule for them. Those who reversed their circumcision by restoring their foreskins usually did so in their youth and it also became a symbol of their abandoning their Jewish covenant.
Aulius Cornelius Celsus (ca. A.D. 14–37) wrote an encyclopedia on agriculture, medicine, military science, rhetoric, jurisprudence and philosophy. All of what survives in his literary contributions, however, is his eight-volume discussion of medicine. In the seventh of his books on medicine, he describes in considerable detail the ancient practice of epispasm, that is, removing the marks of circumcision
not let it be a concern Some believing slaves in Corinth may have been concerned that their social status inhibited them from living for God. Paul argues that if their status did not inhibit God’s call to salvation, it will not inhibit them now that they have the Spirit.
make use of it Refers to the opportunity to have freedom in Christ.
freedperson A legally free person who continued to perform duties for his or her former master. Paul uses this metaphor to suggest that while believers are free, they still obey the Lord and belong to His “household.” See Col 4:1 and note.
slave of Christ Paul asserts that those who were not slaves should regard Christ as their spiritual master. Since they no longer belong to themselves, they must seek to obey Jesus Christ.
Paul is often accused of being indifferent to the plight of slaves, but his overriding concern is the proclamation of the Gospel in light of the coming of the Lord. Some have accused Paul of a Stoic response to the evil of his day, representing something like Epictetus’ lack of concern over how one dies since we all die: “what concern is it to you by what road you descend to the House of Hades? They are all equal” (Discourses 2.6.18, LCL). This is not true for Paul, however, his concern is eschatological, that is, on the future and the importance of preaching the Gospel now. Everything else is subordinate to that.
slaves of men Paul urges the believers not to become enslaved to human wisdom or troubled by the traditions of marriage, slavery, and circumcision; Paul wants them to focus on Christ and what He has done for them.